Am I correct in assuming you're using the term "editing" ICC profiles as a misnomer when most understand the process as "creating" ICC profiles?
If and when you do find any such software, do you know of a control that will enable you to "reduce purple?"
The HP latex will create ICC profiles. You however have no say in how it creates it. You cant pick between GCR/UCR. You can't choose when it starts adding black... You can't tweak it at all. The latex's ICC profile creating is like profiling for dummies. You get a one button click, with no other options / settings. Which is still better than no profiling... But not perfect. Profiling is like an art... Unless you've been doing it for a living for 20 years, and even then... You'll never get perfect. Unless of course starting from scratch you get those options...
I've only ever profiled from onyx. I presumed / hoped that since onyx downloaded the ICC from the printer... You'd be able to "edit" it to change all those settings. Which is why I used the term edit. I can create a profile with onyx... And go back in and "edit" it all I want.
Maybe my terminology is wrong. Maybe you know 10x more about profiling than me (wouldn't doubt it), and in your eyes I'm completely trying to solve a problem that's not as complicated as it seems.
As for using these settings to make it look less purple... There's lots of ways. The quickest dirtiest way is to change the starting black percent. Yes, it'll cause other issues... But again.. it's all about fine tuning and finding a balance.
Right now, if I send a file over with 0/0/0/50 cmyk... The profile created by HP changes it to 30/30/30/0. Which obviously isn't going.to be a nice neutral grey... It's more as I'd call it a light "purple". And I see no reason onyx would use 0 black to create a grey.
Again... Maybe it's because I used the downloaded profile instead of a clone / new one when I told the printer to create the ICC. Which was the point of this thread.. whether those with the built in spectrometer find the colors to be accurate enough... Or if they prefer to create profiles manually, with more control over the results.
We profiled our solvent and our flatbed. Our solvent could hit most colors, including Grey's without much editing. It was profiled great... Our latex was profiled via the printer, it hits most colors good.. with the exception of Grey's. Our Grey's come out blue... Purple... Every shade of color except grey. I can of course manually change the cmyk values and get good Grey's... So either the profiling on it isn't the best, due to lack of control / settings... Or it messed up somewhere along the way. I'll be making a new profile based on recommendations early next week.... And I'll manually makw one in onyx, see the difference.